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profound conception of mutual helpfulness and resulting individual dignity which St. Paul has set forth, according to which each of us is performing a special function in the common life, and that life of all is recognized as the divine life, the manifestation of the life of the Father. When you have come to that point, when you have seen in the imperfect a portion, an aspect, of the total, perfect, divine life, then I am not afraid life will be uninteresting. Indeed I would say to every one who goes from this college, you can count with confidence on a life which shall be vastly more interesting beyond the college walls than ever it has proved here, if you have once acquired the art of penetrating into the imperfect, and finding in limited, finite life the infinite life. "To apprehend thus, draws us a profit from all things we see."

BRYANT

TRANSLATIONS

From the Greek

- Homer's The Iliad. Translated into English blank verse. Abridged to conform to the college entrance requirements in English. With Map, Pronouncing Vocabulary, Suggestions for Study, etc. Riverside Literature Series, No. 243. BRYANT - Homer's The Odyssey. Translated into English blank verse. With Map and Pronouncing Vocabulary. Riverside Literature Series, No. 178.

PALMER Homer's The Odyssey. Revised Edition. Translated into English prose. With an Introduction, Portrait Bust, Maps, and Outlines, Questions, and Suggestions. Riverside Literature Series, No. 180.

Translated into

MORE - Eschylus's Prometheus Bound.
English prose. With an Introduction and Notes.

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PALMER
prose. With an Introduction and Notes.

Sophocles' Antigone. Translated into English

From the Latin

LAING (Editor) – translation.

Masterpieces of Latin Literature.

In

WILLIAMS — Virgil's The Æneid. Translated into English blank verse. With Introduction, Illustrations, and Pronouncing Vocabulary. New edition. Riverside Literature

Series, No. 193.

CRANCH - Virgil's The Æneid. Books I-III translated into English blank verse. In the Riverside Literature Series, No. 112, bound in Bristol Board.

HARRIS - Seneca's Medea, and The Daughters of Troy. Translated into English verse. With an Introduction.

From the Italian

NORTON Dante's Divine Comedy. Complete Edition, three volumes in one. Translated into English prose. With Introduction and Notes.

From the German

TAYLOR-Goethe's Faust, the First Part. Translated into English verse. Riverside Literature Series, No. 206. SHUMWAY - The Nibelungenlied. Translated from the Middle High German with an introductory sketch and notes. Riverside Literature Series, No. 203.

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN CO.

BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO DALLAS SAN FRANCISCO

2101

The Riverside Literature Series contains the authorized editions for school use of the great American authors,

Longfellow, Lowell, Holmes, Whittier, Hawthorne, Emerson, Thoreau, Aldrich, and Harte. It offers, also, a large list of copyrighted material, including selections from such writers as John Burroughs, John Fiske, Joel Chandler Harris, William Dean Howells, John Muir, Josephine Preston Peabody, Charles Dudley Warner, and Kate Douglas Wiggin.

A force in the field of education. Two generations of pupils in our public schools and colleges have studied from the Riverside Literature Series, the oldest series of its kind, and the first to offer to students the best of English and American literature in convenient and inexpensive form.

The largest series of classics for school use. Here is a series of textbooks without equal for wealth and variety of material. It includes over 3300 literary masterpieces, history, biography, letters, essays, poetry, orations, fiction, drama, mythology. Over onethird of the material included is not to be found in any similar series of classics.

Represents the best scholarship in the country. Each volume in the series has received the most careful and scholarly editing available. Students of the Riverside Literature Series get the benefit of the very best teaching that the country can afford.

The extensive sale of the volumes of this series is a concrete demonstration of their adaptation to the needs which it has been their object to supply. Used in every State in the Union and in every dependency of the United States, it also finds its way into nearly a score of foreign countries.

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2102

149. Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.
150. Ouida's Dog of Flanders, etc.
151. Ewing's Jackanapes, etc.

(Continued)

152. Martineau's The Peasant and the Prince.
153. Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream.
154. Shakespeare's Tempest.
155. Irving's Life of Goldsmith.

156. Tennyson's Gareth and Lynette, etc.
157. The Song of Roland.

158. Malory's Merlin and Sir Balin.
159. Beowulf.

160. Spenser's Faerie Queene. Book I.
161. Dickens's Tale of Two Cities.
162. Newman's Prose and Poetry.
163. Shakespeare's Henry V.
164. De Quincey's Joan of Arc, etc.
165. Scott's Quentin Durward.

166. Palgrave's The Golden Treasury.
167. Longfellow's Autobiographical Poems.
168. The Life of Alice Freeman Palmer.
169. Lowell's My Garden Acquaintance, etc.
170. Lamb's Essays of Elia.

171, 172. Emerson's Essays.

173. Kate Douglas Wiggin's Flag-Raising.
174. Kate Douglas Wiggin's Finding a Home.
175. Whittier's Autobiographical Poems.
176. Burroughs's Afoot and Afloat.
177. Bacon's Essays.

178. Bryant's Odyssey.

179. King Arthur Stories from Malory.
180. Palmer's Odyssey.

181. Goldsmith's The Good-Natured Man.
182. Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer.
183. Old English and Scottish Ballads.
184. Shakespeare's King Lear.
185. Moores's Life of Lincoln.

186. Thoreau's Camping in the Maine Woods.
187, 188. Huxley's Autobiography, and Essays.
189. Byron's Childe Harold, Canto IV, etc.
190. Washington's Farewell Address, and Web-
ster's Bunker Hill Oration.
191. The Second Shepherds' Play, etc.
192. Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford.
193. Williams's Eneid.

194. Irving's Bracebridge Hall. Selections.
195. Thoreau's Walden.

196. Sheridan's The Rivals.

197. Parton's Captains of Industry. Selected.
198,199. Macaulay's Lord Clive and W. Hastings.
200. Howells's The Rise of Silas Lapham.
201. Harris's Little Mr. Thimblefinger Stories.
202. Jewett's The Night Before Thanksgiving.
203. Shumway's Nibelungenlied.

204. Sheffield's Old Testament Narrative.
205. Powers's A Dickens Reader.
206. Goethe's Faust. Part I.
207. Cooper's The Spy.

208. Aldrich's Story of a Bad Boy.
209. Warner's Being a Boy.

210. Wiggin's Polly Oliver's Problem.
211. Baylor's Juan and Juanita.
212. Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
213. Hemingway's Le Morte Arthur.

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241. Mills's Story of a Thousand-Year Pine, etc.
243. Bryant's Iliad. Abridged Edition.
245. Antin's At School in the Promised Land.
247. Muir's The Boyhood of a Naturalist.
248. Boswell's Life of Johnson. Abridged.
249. Palmer's Self-Cultivation in English, and
The Glory of the Imperfect.

253. Helen Keller's The Story of My Life.
255. Rittenhouse's The Little Book of Ameri-
can Poets.

257.

Kipling Stories and Poems Every Child
Should Know, Book I.

258. Kipling Stories and Poems Every Child
Should Know, Book II.

259. Burroughs's The Wit of a Duck, etc.
260. Irving's Tales from the Alhambra.
261. Liberty, Peace, and Justice.
262. A Treasury of War Poetry.

263. Peabody's The Piper.

264. Wiggin's Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.
265. Aldrich's Marjorie Daw, Goliath, etc.
266. Sharp's Ways of the Woods.
268. Drinkwater's Abraham Lincoln.
269. Wordsworth: Selections. Arnold: Essay
on Wordsworth.

270. Burroughs's Nature Near Home, etc.
271. Mills's Being Good to Bears, etc.
272. Hagedorn's Americanism of Theodore
Roosevelt.

273. Stevenson's Treasure Island.
274. Harrison's Queed.

275. Carnegie's Own Story for Boys and Girls
276. Drinkwater's Robert E. Lee.

277. Blanchard's Chico.

278. Spyri's Heidi.

279. Sabatini's The Carolinian.
280. Sabatini's Scaramouche.

(See also back cover)

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